A national cross sectional survey of heads of midwifery services of uptake, benefits and barriers to use of obstetric early warning systems (EWS) by midwives

Debra E Bick, Jane Sandall, Marie Furuta, Michael Y K Wee, Richard Isaacs, Gary B Smith, Sarah Beake, on behalf of the Modified Obstetric Early Warning Systems (Mobs) Research Group

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

31 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective
to identify the extent to which Early Warning Systems (EWS) are used by midwives in the United Kingdom (UK), the maternity settings they are used in, physiological parameters used to ‘trigger’ referral, training provision, barriers to implementation and role in preventing maternal morbidity.

Design
cross-sectional survey of heads of midwifery services. An email questionnaire was sent in September 2012.

Setting
UK NHS secondary care organisations providing maternity care.

Findings
heads of midwifery from 107 (68%) of 157 NHS organisations responded, with 108 questionnaires returned as two organisations had recently merged. All organisations, apart from one which only had a free-standing midwifery unit, had introduced EWS. Nearly all respondents (99%) reported EWS were used by midwives antenatally, 76% in labour and 100% on the postnatal ward. All EWS charts included body temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic blood pressure and oxygen saturation although parameters for escalation varied widely. Barriers to use of EWS by midwives included overlap with the partogram in labour, and staff shortages and delays obtaining clinical review when referral was triggered. Two-thirds considered EWS prevented maternal morbidity although few could provide supporting evidence, for example, audit findings. Training for midwives in use of EWS was available in 83% of organisations.

Conclusion
most UK midwives are using EWS, with the highest use in obstetric units. The heterogeneity of EWS currently used potentially limits collation of evidence to inform appropriate system level responses. Research is needed to evaluate the role of EWS to prevent maternal morbidity during and after pregnancy in different maternity settings.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberN/A
Pages (from-to)N/A
Number of pages7
JournalMIDWIFERY
VolumeN/A
Issue numberN/A
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2014

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